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Category Archives: Reparatory Justice

HOW DO YOU REPAIR WHAT IS STILL ACTIVELY IN THE PROCESS OF BEING DESTROYED?

Posted on August 5, 2017 by STOP THE MAANGAMIZI

SECTIONS OF THE AFRIKA CONTINGENT OF THE ISMAR ARE SPEAKING:

ARE WE LISTENING?

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We in the ‘Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide Campaign’ (SMWeCGEC) give special acknowledgement to those Brethren & Sistren who are part of the continental Afrikan contingent of the International Social Movement for Afrikan Reparations (ISMAR) who organised solidarity events with SMWeCGEC in partnership with the 1st August Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March. We recognise the difficulties you have faced from state and non-state agents in co-organising in fraternal league with us as the Afrikan Diaspora in Europe.

We particularly highlight the Ovaherero Genocide Foundation (OJF) event that took place in Namibia on 1st August 2017:

In addition, we give thanks for the SANKOFAAPAE Pan-Afrikan Reparatory Justice Libation Ceremony which took place at Osikan, Jamestown, Accra, Ghana organised by Vazoba featuring Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon of Abibitumikasa http://www.abibitumikasa.com

Please see the video presentation of Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon – REPARATIONS? RETRIBUTION! OR HOW DO YOU REPAIR WHAT IS STILL ACTIVELY IN THE PROCESS OF BEING DESTROYED? which was delivered on 1st August 2017 annual SANKOFAAPAE Pan-Afrikan Reparatory Justice Libation Ceremony at Osikan, Jamestown, Accra, Ghana organised by Vazoba.

 

 

The SANKOFAAPAE Pan-Afrikan Reparatory Justice International Libation Ceremony (SANKOFAAPAE-PARJILC) is a strictly non-party political activity of various grassroots progressive forces of Pan-Afrikan civil society which are independently mobilizing for the ground-up popular education, reparatory justice civic conscientization and its relevant human, peoples’ and Mother Earth rights awareness raising among ordinary masses of peoples throughout the World to achieve our vision of Pan-Afrikan Reparations for Global Justice.

We recognise this SANKOFAAPAE as a unity promotional endeavour, of global dimensions, for connecting into the global Pan-Afrikan reparatory justice struggle, the efforts being made by various in Afrikan communities to assert their rights to self-determination and reconstruction of nationhood including overcoming the divisions imposed by the artificially created European borders and other manifestations of the Maangamizi that continue into the present to the detriment of their Afrikan personality, humanity and sovereignty.

The SANKOFAAPAE is also relevant to providing global visibility for such self-determination battles and the communities waging them in order to facilitate Pan-Afrikan internationalist solidarity for them, including enabling them to participate in efforts of rematriation*/voluntary repatriation as part of Pan-Afrikan reparatory justice. In so doing, Afrikans from the Diaspora can reintegrate into such communities and make their contributions to ensuring recognition, justice and sustainable development in accordance with the ‘Right to Afrika’ which we are promoting as the most vital aspect of the UN ‘International Decade for People of African Descent’.

*The Indigenous concept of ‘Rematriation’ refers to restoring a living material culture to its rightful place on Mother Earth; restoring a people to a spiritual way of life, in sacred relationship with their ancestral lands; and reclaiming ancestral remains, spirituality, culture, knowledge and resources.

If you would like to know more about how to get involved with the year-round Vazoba solidarity initiatives in association with the SMWeCGEC in association with the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March please contact: Bro Mawuse Yao on + (233) 203 790 105 or email sankofaapae.ghana@gmail.com.

See here for the aims of the SMWeCGEC :

 

Posted in AFRIKAN HELLACAUST, INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL MOVEMENT FOR AFRIKAN REPARATIONS, ISMAR, REPARATIONS, Reparatory Justice, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI CAMPAIGN, THE 2017 AFRIKAN EMANCIPATION DAY REPARATIONS MARCH, Uncategorized | Tagged Afrikan Liberation, British Colonialism, Emancipation Day, Genocide, Grassroots Leadership, Hellacaust, Holocaust, Maangamizi, Movement-Building, Pan-Afrikanism, People Power, REPARATIONS, Repatriation, Self-Repairs, Social Movement, Stop the Maangamizi | Leave a comment

LETTER TO PM MAY & HAND-IN OF THE 2017 STOP THE MAANGAMIZI PETITION

Posted on August 3, 2017 by STOP THE MAANGAMIZI

MARCH 2017 THABO

From the series Reparation March. A delegation hands the annual ‘Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide’ Petition to 10 Downing Street. Photo © Thabo Jaiyesimi/Photos

http://www.thabojaiyesimi.co.uk/REPARATIONS-MARCH

Thabo Jaiyesimi, Photojournalist +44(0)7413096856

 

The delegation consisted of:
Hon. Kweme ABUBAKA, Ethiopia, Afrikan Black International Congress (EABIC), Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee (AEDRMC)
Mama Lindiwe TSELE, Veteran Anti-Apartheid & Pan-Afrikan Activist-Organiser
Anouska RAYMOND, Co-Facilitator, Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations Outreach Team
Esther Utijua MUINJANGUE, Chairperson, Ovaherero Genocide Foundation (OJF)
Esther STANFORD-XOSEI,
Coordinator General, ‘Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide ‘Campaign
Spokesperson, & Co-Vice Chair, Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee (AEDRMC).

 

MARCH 2017 PETITION

 

The following is the letter that was delivered to the office of the UK Prime Minister with the 9636 signatures that accompanied the 2017 Stop the Maangamizi:We Charge Genocie/Ecocide Petition (SMWeCGEC).

LETTER TO THERESA MAY 2017-page-001LETTER TO THERESA MAY 2017-page-002LETTER TO THERESA MAY 2017-page-003LETTER TO THERESA MAY 2017-page-004LETTER TO THERESA MAY 2017-page-005

Posted in AEDRMC, AFRIKAN HELLACAUST, ALL PARTY PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSION OF INQUIRY (APPCITARJ), INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL MOVEMENT FOR AFRIKAN REPARATIONS, ISMAR, PREFIGURATIVE POLITICS, REPARATIONS, Reparatory Justice, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI CAMPAIGN, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI PETITION, THE 2017 AFRIKAN EMANCIPATION DAY REPARATIONS MARCH, UBUNTUKGOTLA/PITGJ, Uncategorized | Tagged 1st August, Afrikan Liberation, British Government, Cognitive Justice, Commission of Inquiry, Ecocide, Emancipation Day, Genocide, Grassroots Leadership, Hellacaust, ISMAR, Maangamizi, Pan-Afrikanism, People Power, Social Movement | Leave a comment

REPARATIONS MARCH 2017: PROMOTING THE REPARATORY JUSTICE CHANGE WE ARE ORGANISING TO BRING ABOUT

Posted on June 2, 2017 by STOP THE MAANGAMIZI

An International Call to Participate in the 1st Mosiah (August) Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March in Conjunction with the Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide Campaign (SMWeCGEC)

 

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On 1st Mosiah (August) 2017 thousands of people will take to the streets in Europe’s biggest Afrikan Reparations March ever, marching from Windrush Square in Brixton to the Houses of Parliament, London. However, in this the fourth year of the march taking place, we aim for there to be numerous simultaneous marches and/or other reparations actions in various countries in Afrika, the Americas, the Caribbean and Europe.

You can find out more about the aims of the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March here: http://www.reparationsmarch.org/

The March is partnered with the ‘Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide’ Campaign and you can find out more about the SMWeCGEC here:
https://stopthemaangamizi.com/

Maangamizi is a Kiswahili term for Afrikan hellacaust of chattel, colonial & neo-colonial enslavement

 

Why We March on 1st August

 

“Accepting our responsibility and obligation to our Ancestors for ensuring that the Afrikan identity is proclaimed, maintained and developed; and that Afrika is restored to its rightful place at the centre of world politics; call upon all people of Afrikan origin in the Caribbean, Afrika, Europe, the Americas and elsewhere to support the movement for reparations and join forces with a view to forming a strong united front capable of exposing, confronting and overcoming the psychological, economic and cultural harm inflicted upon us by peoples of European origin.”

Birmingham Declaration, Africa Reparations Movement (UK), 01/01/94

 

The 1st of August has been chosen as the day of the reparations march because it is the officially recognised “Emancipation Day”, marking the passing of the Act for the Abolition of slavery throughout the British Colonies; for promoting the industry of the manumitted slaves; and for compensating the persons hitherto entitled to the service of such slaves (also known as the Slavery Abolition Act) on 1 August 1833 and took effect 1 August 1834. The significance of this date in history is that it is the date that after all the years of resistance by chattelised Afrikans, torn away from our Motherland, Britain and its fellow European enslavers of Afrikan people were compelled to recognise that they could no longer continue to enslave us without severe consequences. It therefore represents a symbolic day recognising our refusal to accept enslavement, in every manner, including its present-day manifestations.

Contrary to popular belief, however, the Slavery Abolition Act did not free the 800,000+ Afrikans who were then unjustly considered to be the legal property of Britain’s enslaving class. In fact, the act contained a provision for £20 million financial compensation to the enslavers, by the British taxpayer, for the loss of their so-called “property”. That sum represented 40% of the total government expenditure for 1834, the modern equivalent of between £16bn and £17bn and represented the largest bailout in British history until the bailout of the banks in 2009. It was the British Houses of Parliament, which in this unjust piece of legislation, upheld the notion that the Afrikan enslaved and their descendants were not human, but property and determined that the 800,000 people in the Caribbean were assessed as having a market value of £47 million.

The British Parliament also determined that enslaved Afrikans in the Caribbean would receive nothing. Instead they were forced, through the provision of this unjust law, to pay the remaining £27 million costs for their so-called emancipation by providing 45 hours of unpaid labour each week for their former ‘masters’, for a further four years after the passing of the Abolition Act. Clearly, the British state cemented this legalised form of injustice by forcing the enslaved to pay part of the costs for their legalised ‘manumission’. In practical terms, however, only enslaved persons below the age of six were manumitted as all enslaved persons over the age of six were redesignated as “apprentices”.


Girls On Sugar Plantation: Trinidad 

So, in remembrance and continued resistance to this legalised form of injustice, which further entrenched the impoverishment of our foreparents in various parts of the British Empire, we the illustrious Sons and Daughters of Global Afrika have to mobilise ourselves in a united front and effort to engage in the galvanising of our people in a collective ‘show of strength’. The issue of securing justice by way of reparations for Afrikan slavery, colonialism and neo-colonialism and their legacies requires developing a glocal Afrikan perspective and organising framework. We are calling on you to do join the March in demonstration of our principled operational unity on the cause of holistic reparations for Afrikans both at home and abroad.

 

Promoting the Reparatory Justice Change We Are Organising to Bring About

 

“Progressive social movements do not simply produce statistics
and narratives of oppression; rather, the best ones do what great
poetry always does: transport us to another place, compel us to relive horrors and, more importantly, enable us to imagine a new
society. We must remember that the conditions and the very existence of social movements enable participants to imagine something different, to realize that things need not always be this way.”

Robin D.G. Kelley, ‘Freedoms Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination’, (2002), p.23

 

sm-reparations-is

 

For this year’s Reparations March we will be building on the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee’s (AEDRMC) motto of ‘Education is Part of the Preparation for Reparations’ as part of the mobilisation and consciousness raising of our people towards playing their part in efforts to enforce the stopping of the Maangamizi, in this neo-colonial phase, in the process of effecting and securing holistic and trasnformative reparatory justice. We are doing so by encouraging those attending the March to promote, in a concrete, visual and informative/educational way, the reparatory justice organising work that they are engaged in year-round. What this means is that we encourage you to represent, profile and display the reparations solutions that you advocate and are involved in mobilising and organising to bring about all year-round.

Preparation

Here are a few examples of how you can prepare yourself, families, friends, groups, organisations and communities for effectively participating in the March:

(1) Come with placards which visually portray and promote:

  • images of Afrikan heroes, sheroes, Maangamizi Resistors and Martyrs that have made a contribution to Afrikan people’s struggles for freedom from the Maangamizi, both in the past and in the present;

vintage-calligraphic-elements-1nyoWZ-clipart

  • slogans and quotations which speak to the various campaigns and struggles Afrikan people worldwide have been waging for reparatory justice, both in the past and in the present;

vintage-calligraphic-elements-1nyoWZ-clipart

  • the reparatory justice programmes and initiatives you, your family, organisation or campaigning group are involved in. Of particular reparatory justice interest is work that is being planned and done with reference to Afrikan Community Self-Repairs needs and aspirations such as work in education, health, employment, parenting and social care, (particularly for children, the elderly and the differently-abled), sports, recreation, social enterprise and cooperative economic development.

 

SM repatriation-march-brixton-02

 

Afrikan Community Self-Repairs are the self-determined efforts that need to be made in building our own power, in such a way, that Afrikan heritage communities are able to identify and enhance ongoing work towards stopping the contemporary manifestations of the Maangamizi, which are putting the individuals, families and other social groups that make up our communities into a state of disrepair; as well as reasoning and consciously carrying out the alternative solutions for glocally rebuilding our power base as communities, in such a way that that they are eventually transformed, in accordance with the principles and programmatic demands of Pan-Afrikan Reparations for Global Justice.

So, for example:

  • You may be running a care home for children, differently-abled or elderly people, if so, you could bring along a placard that not only profiles your bespoke service, but also demands appropriate resources for the Afrikan culturally competent care of those you are serving;
    vintage-calligraphic-elements-1nyoWZ-clipart
  • Students are encouraged to come on the March with placards addressing the Afriphobic and anti-Black racism they suffer in their institutions and the activities they are carrying out to resist their unjust situation and effect institutional change;vintage-calligraphic-elements-1nyoWZ-clipart
  • Those from faith communities who attend churches, mosques, temples and other religious/spiritual organisations are also encouraged to come on the March with placards displaying messages relevant to their liberation theology work, in their respective places of worship and fellowship, which are relevant to reparatory justice.vintage-calligraphic-elements-1nyoWZ-clipart

(2) Participate in the Mwakalenkonso (Revered Ancestors) Bloc by coming to the March appropriately dressed as or otherwise symbolically representing a heroic ancestor from your own family line or a community Ancestor who has in some way been involved in resistance to the Maangamizi or advocating some form of reparatory justice. We must always remember that our people’s claims and right to reparations are based on the principle of intergenerational justice and therefore have transgenerational, transnational and intercultural dimensions. By appearing on the March visually representing or otherwise imaging revered Ancestors, one will be doing so in remembrance, honour and recognition of the interconnectedness of our Ancestor’s foundational struggles to resist the Maangamizi with our own. This will not detract from the serious nature of the protest that we will be undertaking, however does introduce a more creative element to protest actions that are typical of marches and other forms of street action. Claims to reparations have to move beyond merely calling on the name of our Ancestors as justification for the genesis of our entitlements to redress today to truly recognising the personhood, worldviews and visions of reparatory justice of the Afrikans that were enslaved in various parts of the world. In addition, we have a duty to past generations and future generations to ensure that our reparatory justice objectives, programmes and actions bring about the holistic and transformatory redress; empowerment, repair and restoration of our people’s sovereignty. Being visually reminded of our Ancestors activism and struggles to emancipate us compels us to uphold the reparations ethics and standards of the past generations of our clan, family, or community freedom-fighters.

Here are a few examples of community Ancestors, (can you guess who they are):

ancestors

MARCH PAGE 2 Afrikan Ancestors Reparations March (A4) (2)

 

(3) Participate in the Ujaama (Global Afrikan Family) Bloc by visually displaying and portraying national and country flags, national dress, national heroes and sheroes, Martyrs etc. as well as organisational emblems, motifs and pictures of reparatory justice struggles of our peoples resisting the Maangamizi in various parts of the world including, Afrika, Abya Yala (so-called Americas,) and its sub-regions such as the Caribbean, Australasia, Oceania, Europe etc.

(4) Of course, we are also relying on you to assist in the general mobilisation towards getting people to come on the March, from all sectors within our communities. Each one invite and attend with many!

Ujaama – Gobal Afrikan Family Bloc
If you would like to participate internationally by amplifying the voices of Afrikan heritage reparatory justice communities of interest and their struggles to emancipate our people from the continuing Maangamizi worldwide, you can do so by participating in the Ujaama – Global Afrikan Family Bloc. If you would like to take part in the Ujaama Bloc please call or text Bro Kofi on 07751143043 or emailing stopthemaangamizi@gmail.com

Mwakalenkonso – Revered Ancestors Bloc
If you are in the UK and would like to participate in the Mwakalenkonso – Revered Ancestors Bloc please text or call Bro Simeon/Sis Nishika on 07751143043 or email stopthemaangamizi@gmail.com.

Take a look at this video to hear more about the importance of the March viz-a-viz wider reparations social movement-building.

In order to increase impact, we also encourage you to innovatively think for yourself and consult with the AEDRMC, as organisers of the March, on your own ways and ideas of adding to the creativity of expressing, on this March, the reparatory justice change you/we are mobilising and organising to bring about.

ismar

Help us to Sustain the March as the Street Column of the International Social Movement for Afrikan Reparations (ISMAR)

Between the annual 1st August Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations Marches, you can contribute to building and sustaining the organisation of the following blocs:

• Mwakalenkonso – Revered Ancestors
• Pamoja – Community
• Ujamaa – Global Afrikan Family
• Fiankra – Repatriation
• Imani – Interfaith
• Sankofasuafo – Students
• Ujima – Trade Unionists
• Kuumba – Artists
• Ubuntu – Non-Afrikan Allies.

These blocs continue to operate, mobilise and organise throughout the year as part of reparations social movement-building, locally, nationally and internationally at the core of which is the intergenerational Pan-Afrikan Liberation Movement. A reparations social movement-building approach challenges reparations organisations, campaigning and/or special interest groups and the general Afrikan public heritage to critically assess how we have organised ourselves to achieve our short to medium term reparations goals. In particular, it enables ISMAR (reparations movement) participants to explore their political agendas, involvement of constituents and strategies for collective action underpinned by processes of individual, collective and organisational reflection.

By using a movement-building approach, constituencies of the ISMAR can increase the efficacy of the ISMAR by incorporating an analysis of power and learning from the successes and failures of previous and existing efforts to effect and secure reparatory justice. Admittedly, we are faced with the huge challenge of building the power, locally, nationally and internationally to bring about, compel and influence the reparations goals and outcomes we as Afrikans have set for ourselves. However, the multifaceted processes of mobilisation and organising that take place related to the March are part of this process of building community power to effect and secure the reparatory justice processes we set ourselves in the short, medium and long-term.

 

“Unless our struggle leads to the Pan–Afrikanist revolutionary, concientisation and mobilisation of the broad masses of Afrikan people throughout the Continent and the Diaspora to achieve first and foremost their definitive emancipation from the impeding vestiges of colonialism and the still enslaving bonds of present day neocolonialism, to smash the yoke of white racist supremacy and utterly destroy the mental and physical stranglehold of Eurocentrism upon Afrikans at home and abroad delinking Afrika [and Afrikans] from imperialism…we shall have no power to back our claim for restitution and to give us the necessary force of coercion to make the perpetrators of the heinous crimes against us to honour the obligations of even the best fashioned letter and spirit of international law.”

Kofi Mawuli Klu, ‘Charting an Afrikan Self-Determined Path of Legal Struggle for Reparations’, a draft paper presented to the 11th December 1993 Birmingham Working Conference of the African Reparations Movement, UK, (1993)



The most transformative of movements for reparations have generally represented a form of ‘prefigurative politics’ which means movement participants organise as if they are already in the process of bringing about the Post-Afrikan Reparations World Order by taking steps to bring about the inter and intra-Afrikan community self-repairs required for us to become whole and guarantee community’s members collective security and prosperity. This speaks to the principle that reparations activists and reparations organisations should model in their present-day lives and work the new values, institutions and social relationships they advocate for on a broader scale, as part of their strategy for effecting and securing the reparatory justice social change sought. In other words, becoming and modelling the change we want to see in the world. This is generally taken to mean that we who are proponents of reparatory justice, have a moral duty have to strive to reflect the kind of society we are fighting for in our lifestyle, families, organisations, special interest groups, movements and communities etc.

If this bloc-building work is sustained between the marches, the annual Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March then becomes the culmination point of our year-round community self -repairs work, reparations campaigning and other forms of activism. In addition, the March is being a vehicle for publicly showcasing the strength of our organising, networks and capacity-building to strengthen and advance the ISMAR.

As part of the bloc-building, please remember that the costs of emancipating ourselves from the modern-day Maangamizi are not free. Reparations social-movement building needs resourcing, and this is a movement that is self-funded. Fundraising to build and sustain the March, as the street column of the ISMAR, must also go on all year round. You can support the work towards facilitating the March and its related campaigning aspects by donating to the ASR Fund (Afrikan Self-Repairs) of the AEDRMC. If you would like to donate to the costs of the Reparations March donate at: https://www.gofundme.com/ukmarch.

Alternatively, you can make a contribution to the ASR Fund as follows:

SM March Committee Bank Details

 

 

For further info about the rest of the blocs and how you can get involved contact the AEDRMC:
Tel: 07922035446/ 07597592889 Email: getinvolved@reparationsmarch.org
Instagram: The March UK
FB page: TheMarch August

 

“Fully persuaded that the damage sustained by the Afrikan peoples is not a ‘thing of the past’ but is painfully manifest in the damaged lives of contemporary Afrikans, from Harlem to Harare, in the damaged economies of the Black World from Guinea to Guyana, from Somalia to Surinam.”

A declaration of the first Abuja Pan-Afrikan Conference on Reparations for Afrikan Enslavement, Colonisation and Neo-Colonisation, sponsored by the Organisation of African Unity and its Reparations Commission April 27-29, 1993, Abuja, Nigeria

 

You Can Still Participate If You are Outside of the UK

We invite you to also organise a solidarity march or event in your locality or country on the 1st August 2017. If you are not able to organise a march, we encourage you to organise some other type of solidarity reparations action, activity or event such as: a libation ceremony (as occurs annually in Accra, (Ghana), rally, reparations radiothon e.g.#Conversation Reparations (as occurs in the USA) or reparatory justice ‘occupations’ of specific places with connections to the Maangamizi, in the past or the present. For example, companies, university campuses or historic building sites.

Even if your community were not enslaved or colonised by the British Empire, you can still connect with what we are doing in the UK by highlighting and educating people about the British Establishment’s complicity in the Maangamizi as it affects and impacts on your personhood, family and/or community. Examples of such impacts may include, land grabs, extractive industries, environmental degradation, GMOs, tax-dodging and other forms of corporate looting, debt-bondage, various forms of externally reinforced reactionary violence such as US-AFRICOM presence proxy wars in addition to so-called ‘Black on Black’ violence in self-destructive subservience to the global system of white supremacist racism, including its gendered forms.

At minimum, please consider sending a solidarity statement to info@reparationsmarch.org. or stopthemaangamizi@gmail.com

 

“Afrika is a paradox which illustrates and highlights neo-colonialism. Her earth is rich, yet the products that come from above and below the soil continue to enrich, not Afrikans predominantly, but groups and individuals who operate to Afrika’s impoverishment.”

Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah

 

In West Afrika?, You Can Participate in the SANKOFAAPAE Pan-Afrikan Reparatory Justice International Libation Ceremony in Ghana

ED GHANA 2

 

We as organisers of and participants in the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March, highly appreciate what is being in Ghana and encourage all those interested in the March living in Ghana or West Afrika to help build and strengthen this satellite process in Ghana and extend it into the countries in which you live, if you are not resident in Ghana. The SANKOFAAPAE Pan-Afrikan Reparatory Justice International Libation Ceremony (SANKOFAAPAE-PARJILC) is a strictly non-party political activity of various grassroots progressive forces of Pan-Afrikan civil society which are independently mobilizing for the ground-up popular education, reparatory justice civic conscientization and its relevant human, peoples’ and Mother Earth rights awareness raising among ordinary masses of peoples throughout the World to achieve our vision of Pan-Afrikan Reparations for Global Justice.

We recognise this SANKOFAAPAE as a unity promotional endeavour, of global dimensions, for connecting into the global Pan-Afrikan reparatory justice struggle, the efforts being made by various in Afrikan communities to assert their rights to self-determination and reconstruction of nationhood including  overcoming the divisions imposed by the artificially created European borders and other manifestations of the Maangamizi that continue into the present to the detriment of their Afrikan personality, humanity and sovereignty.

Examples of such national self-determinist endeavours with reparatory justice bearings which seek to overcome the divisive colonial 1885 boundaries of the Congress of Berlin and counter the ensuing Euro-centric economic and geopolitical interests which have been inimical to the aspirations of Afrikans include, but are not restricted to:

  • Ablodeduko Movement for Gbetowo Pan-Afrikan Reparatory Justice Self-Determination, Unification and Sovereignty
  • Edo People’s Movement for the Restoration of Benin
  • Igbo National Self-Determination Movement
  • Movement For the Survival of the Ogoni People
  • Niger Delta Sovereignty Movement
  • O’odua Liberation Movement/Yoruba Self-Determination Movement
  • Bunyoro-Kitara Kingdom Movement
  • Sahrawi National Liberation Movement
  • Kgeikani Kweni Movement (First People of the Kalahari)
  • Nubian Katala Movement
  • OvaHerero & Nama Genocide Redress Movement
  • Marikana Massacre Redress Movement
  • Nyasaland Massacre Redress Movement
  • Ethiopian Genocide Redress Movement
  • Bamileke Genocide Redress Movement
  • Oromo Liberation Movement
  • Tigrayan Liberation Movement
  • Muhimu Kenya, Land & Freedom Army Movement
  • Maasai Autonomy Movement
  • Landless Peoples Movement
  • Abahlali base Mjondolo Shackdwellers Movement
  • Affirmative Repositioning Movement
  • People’s Union of Cameroon
  • Economic Freedom Fighters of Azania
  • Peoples Land Organisation
  • Pan-Afrikan Congress of Azania.

 

The SANKOFAAPAE is also relevant to providing global visibility for such self-determination battles and the communities waging them in order to facilitate Pan-Afrikan internationalist solidarity for them, including enabling them to participate in efforts of rematriation*/voluntary repatriation as part of Pan-Afrikan reparatory justice. In so doing, Afrikans from the Diaspora can reintegrate into such communities and make their contributions to ensuring recognition, justice and sustainable development in accordance with the ‘Right to Afrika’ which we are promoting as the most vital aspect of the UN ‘International Decade for People of African Descent’.

*The Indigenous concept of Rematriation refers to restoring a living material culture to its rightful place on Mother Earth; restoring a people to a spiritual way of life, in sacred relationship with their ancestral lands; and reclaiming ancestral remains, spirituality, culture, knowledge and resources.

If you are in Ghana/West Afrika and would like to participate in the Libation Ceremony contact Bro Mawuse on + (233) 203 790 105 or email Bro mawuse.yao@gmail.com

 

“Convinced that the pursuit of reparations by the Afrikan peoples in the continent and in the Diaspora will itself be a learning experience in self-discovery and in uniting experience politically and psychologically.”

A declaration of the first Abuja Pan-Afrikan Conference on Reparations for Afrikan Enslavement, Colonisation and Neo-Colonisation, sponsored by the Organisation of African Unity and its Reparations Commission April 27-29, 1993, Abuja, Nigeria

 

How You Can Support the ‘Stop The Maangamizi’ Campaign (SMWeCGEC) in between the Marches

You can still sign the ‘Stop the Maangamizi’ Petition which gets handed in to the Office of the UK Prime Minister each year as a key feature of the annual Reparations March. The Petition is also available in several other European languages including French, Dutch and German.

If you are in the UK you can also lobby your local MP or elected official to take action on the key demands of the SMWeCGEC by utilising this postcard template.

You can take action on the SMWeCGEC in many other ways, see here for some suggestions.

Paraphrasing, our great Arikan Liberator Marcus Mosiah Garvey, who reminded us almost 100 years ago, “Up you mighty people, you can accomplish what you will!”

In Livicated Service, Struggle & Solidarity

Esther Stanford-Xosei,
Official Spokesperson, Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee (AEDRMC),

Coordinator-General of the International Steering Committee, Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide Campaign (SMWeCGEC)

Jendayi Serwah,
Co-Chair, AEDRMC, Co-Vice Chair SMWeCGEC

Prophet Kwaku, Co-Chair, AEDRMC

 

“It will be gross self-delusive wishful thinking to believe that those wielding the reins of White racist supremacy, are going to pay and serious heed to the Afrikan demand for Reparations, unless their hold on the machinery of global power is effectively challenged by the well-organised, upsurgent and self-empowering masses of Afrikan people and their allied progressive forces throughout the world.”

Kofi Mawuli Klu ‘Charting an Afrikan Self-Determined Path of Legal Struggle for Reparations’, a draft paper presented to the 11th December 1993 Birmingham Working Conference of the African Reparations Movement, UK, (1993)

Posted in AEDRMC, INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL MOVEMENT FOR AFRIKAN REPARATIONS, ISMAR, REPARATIONS, Reparatory Justice, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI CAMPAIGN, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI PETITION, THE 2017 AFRIKAN EMANCIPATION DAY REPARATIONS MARCH, Uncategorized | Tagged 1st August, British Colonialism, Emancipation Day, Genocide, Holocaust, ISMAR, Maangamizi, Movement-Building, People Power, REPARATIONS, Reparatory Justice, Self-Repairs, Social Movement, THE 2017 AFRIKAN EMANCIPATION DAY REPARATIONS MARCH | Leave a comment

ABOUT THE ALL-PARTY PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSION OF INQUIRY FOR TRUTH & REPARATORY JUSTICE (APPCITARJ)

Posted on October 12, 2015 by STOP THE MAANGAMIZI

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This article was updated on 07/08/17, 27/06/18 and 17/10/20 from when it was originally published in 2015

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“The damage sustained by the Afrikan peoples is not a thing of the past, but is painfully manifested in the damaged lives of contemporary Afrikans from Harlem to Harare’ in the damaged economies of the Black World from Guinea to Guyana from Somalia to Suriname.”

Abuja Proclamation of the First Conference on Reparations for Enslavement, Colonisation & Neocolonisation, 1993

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No exact template or model exists for the All-Party Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry for Truth & Reparatory Justice (APPCITARJ) in that it will have to be shaped in a way that meets the needs and aspirations of Afrikan Heritage Communities that have been enslaved, colonised or otherwise oppressed by the British Empire and/or the current British State. However, our vision is that the APPCITARJ will consist of British and European Parliamentary Commissions established with representation from the political parties in these parliaments and thy will hear our submissions as Afrikan Heritage Communities who have been impacted by the Maangamizi (Afrikan hellacaust of chattel, colonial and neocolonial enslavement). This is an example of the revolutionary use of reform in that we are tactically seeking to use establishment institutions and some of their processes to achieve some of our revolutionary objectives for reparatory justice social change and transformation.

For us in the ‘Stop the Maangamizi: We Charge Genocide/Ecocide!’ Campaign (SMWeCGEC), this is not about taking our individual and collective cases to parliamentarians for those parliamentarians, on their own, to decide on the merits of our individual/family/people’s case and to make final judgements about what the outcomes should be. In our view, this adjudication function can best be achieved by the establishment of the Ubuntukgotla-Peoples International Tribunal for Global Justice(U-PITGJ) in which representatives of our people and other peoples who have experienced European colonialism, enslavement and genocide become the judges using law from our various people’s legal traditions. Rather, the establishment of the APPCITARJs, at the levels of the Westminster Houses of Parliament and the European Parliament, are a tactic to facilitate widespread evidence gathering which reveal facts about the magnitude of the Maangamizi and for the public dissemination of that evidence as part of the battle to win hearts of minds and influence public opinion to support our people’s cause.

It is therefore important for the proposed APPCITARJ to seek an appropriately weighted balance between an individualized approach that places victims and perpetrators at the centre of the process and recognising as well as redressing the impact of the Maangamizi on whole collectivities. However, this requires a focus on tackling the systemic aspects of the Maangamizi and examining the role of institutions, structures of legitimisation and governance in its continuance. In this regard, we are keen to ensure that the systemic aspects of the Maangamizi are no longer hidden from scrutiny or public accountability.

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“We call upon the British state to honour the need and right of the descendants of the enslaved to speak in a public forum, provide testimony and evidence of how the legacies of enslavement are resulting in continued human and peoples’ rights violations, impaired quality of life and the ensuing destruction of the essential foundations of life for Afrikan people today.”

SMWeCGEC Petition

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Dissemination of such evidence in the arena of the British public will compel the majority of the British public to agree with us that there is an overwhelming case for their criminal ruling classes to answer. In effect, we want our people to have a ‘hearing’ and to speak to the public, (court of public opinion) through the British Parliament. This entails exposing the evidence to the glare of the public and utilising various forms of media who will be reporting on the proceedings to influence public support for our cause of Afrikan Reparatory Justice. According to the 2005 UN Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to A Remedy and Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of International Human Rights Law and Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law, an essential aspect of reparations include, among other measures: investigation of the facts, official acknowledgement and apology, receipt of answers; an opportunity for victims to speak in a public forum about their experiences and to have active involvement in the reparative process. We are therefore seeking to ensure that our people’s testimonies will bring to light all the gory details that the British public has not been allowed to hear; has been denied true education about; and that we too have not been allowed to narrate on platforms with official legitimisation.

YOUTH PLARDS

This parliamentary and extra-parliamentary process will create the opportunity for a diverse collectivity of Afrikan voices, from all over the world, to speak to the Maangamizi crimes of the British Empire, the British State and its ruling classes, by providing public testimony about our family and people’s case, as we see it. Once these testimonies of ordinary people, as well as the various research and other forms of documentation of the Maangamizi that exists, are being heard over and over again, clarity will dawn on the British public.

Ultimately, we are seeking to ensure that our combined evidence, voiced, recorded and reported from the UK and European Parliaments, paints the horrific truth of the culprits crimes. This is an opportunity we have never been given. Once the British public have heard the whole truth, it will be easier for us to win them over to our side; to publicise who the main culprits are ; and elucidate the harm that their deception over the years has done not only to Afrikan Heritage Communities, but also to the British people as a whole. This spark-rippling process will in itself compel the majority of those conscientious members of the British people to join us all in movement-building to stop the harm and repair the damage being done to themselves, and to others, in their name. So what will be a just retribution in terms of holding such perpetrators to account? One form of retribution is to strip the criminals of their ill-gotten wealth and status (“Expropriate the Expropriators!) and reclaim our wealth for Reparatory Justice Redistribution.

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A large part of our people’s case for compensation is that this is unjustly obtained intergenerational wealth includes the wealth that which we as Afrikan Heritage Communities, are historically owed and have been denied, in addition to what is being stolen from and owed to our contemporary generations. We therefore advocate that we must have out of that redistributed wealth, all that we need to repair our own selves i.e. Afrikan Community Self-Repairs*. Although, we concede that the majority of British people deserve some of that wealth from their ruling classes in terms of wealth that has also been stolen from them over the years. Practically, this is how we see that external compensation in the form of the just redistribution of our people’s wealth will be secured.

*Afrikan Community Self-Repairs are the self-determined efforts that need to be made in building our own power, in such a way, that Afrikan heritage communities are able to identify and enhance ongoing work towards stopping the contemporary manifestations of the Maangamizi, which are putting the individuals, families and other social groups that make up our communities into a state of disrepair; as well as reasoning and consciously carrying out the alternative solutions for glocally rebuilding our power base as communities, in such a way that that they are eventually transformed, in accordance with the principles and programmatic demands of Pan-Afrikan Reparations for Global Justice.

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“The inheritance of rich people’s wealth by their children should stop. The expropriators should have their wealth expropriated and redistributed“

Arundhati Roy

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So for us, the strategic purpose of the APPCITARJ is to divorce the masses of the British public from aligning with their ruling classes in order that they can once again be on the right side of history (as were their abolitionists);  in collaborating with us to strip their ruling classes of their ill-gotten wealth and other gains and collaborate with us to secure its redistribution.

One of the greatest challenges for transformative reparatory justice change processes and mechanisms is  addressing not only the histories of acts of Maangamizi dispossession and violence, but also those of structural violence, where power relations are manifest through the systematic and collective violation/s of economic, social and cultural rights. In many contexts, racialised and otherwise marginalised populations, particularly those of Afrikan heritage, are often systematically excluded from community development initiatives as well as often being denied full participation and substantive Afrikan Heritage Community representation in social, economic and political life.  So the way other commissions of inquiry or truth commissions have interacted with ‘victims’ of these harm causing violations; such as receiving testimony, writing histories of victimization in such a way that assists such groups to recover their agency, and recommending reparative approaches – can be replicated with Afrikan Heritage Communities as a collective victim.

The 2014 Instance de la Vérité et Dignité (IVD, Commission for Truth and Dignity) in Tunisia pointed the way, by seeking to address the broad range of demands that the Tunisian Revolution made, including not just for truth, but also threats to dignity including issues such as the lack of graduate jobs and the often extreme geographical inequalities that came to the fore in Tunisia under the Ben Ali regime. To address the issue of the collective and structural violence of social exclusion; and for the first time in the history of truth commissions; the IVD defined and implemented the concept of a collective victim as including: “any person who suffered harm following a violation…, be they individuals, or groups of individuals” (Organic law on Transitional Justice).

To maximize the impact of collective reparations for Afrikan Heritage Communities requires that such reparations not only address harms, but also the structures and institutions underpinning such harms, and ensure that the such reparations transform the circumstances of unjustly impoverished and marginalised victims. Such transformation occuring in such a way as to address contemporary injustice in its multiple dimensions, (i.e. historical, ethnic, social, political, cultural, religious, sexual, epistemic and ecological). Such injustice being underpinned by ‘cognitive injustice’ which is the failure to recognise the plurality of different knowledges by which Afrikan Heritage Communities give meaning to their existence. It is only by pursuing global cognitive justice that holistic and transformative reparatory justice can become a reality. Hence why in our approach to developing the APPCITARJ, we are cognizant of the need to also adopt approaches, processes, mechanisms and initiatives that incorporate the legal cosmovisions (Indigenous worldviews), ideas and claims of Afrikan people. This in itself, requires a more complete set of tools for building alternatives to the present system of legalized injustice.

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“Always remember that the people do not fight for ideas, for the things that exist only in the heads of individuals. The people fight and accept the necessary sacrifices. But they do it in order to gain material advantages, to live in peace and to improve their lives, to experience progress, and to be able to guarantee a future for their children. National liberation, the struggle against colonialism, working for peace and progress, independence – all of these will be empty words without significance for the people unless they are translated into real improvements in the conditions of life.”

          Amilcar Cabral, Guinea-Bissau: A Study of Political Mobilisation, 1974, p.91

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Among the challenges facing reparations for Maangamizi resistors and survivors, is to differentiate between reparations and the requirement that a state deliver basic public services. Reparatory justice measures will not be secured from others outside of a comprehensive and holistic Afrikan Heritage Community Pempamsie (sewing together) Community Self-Repairs Plan and related policies, which must accompany and shape it. This is why we in the SMWeCGEC, in partnership with the Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March Committee (AEDRMC), its allied organisations and other formations, are mobilizing and supporting others to self-organise year-round building on the 2017-2018 Afrikan Emancipation Day Reparations March theme of ‘Promoting the reparatory justice change that we are organising to bring about’ with the 2018-2019 theme: ‘Nothing About Us Without Us: Actualizing the Reparatory Justice Change We Envisage‘!

The beginnings of  such a Pempamsie Plan were documented in the 2003 Black Quest for Justice Campaign (BQJC) legal & extra-legal Strategy for Pan-Afrikan Reparations for Gobal Justice; and were included in its legal action supported by the Pan-Afrikan Reparations Coalition in Europe (PARCOE), the Black United Front (BUF), the then newly formed Global Afrikan Congress (GAC) and the International Front for Afrikan Reparations (IFAR).

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Characteristics of Commissions of Inquiry with Truth Commission Functions:

In her thesis, ‘Truth Commissions and Public Enquiries: Investigating Historical Injustices in established Democracies’ Kim Stanton asserts that the truth commission is really a specialised form of public inquiry that has developed over the last three decades as a response to historical injustices.

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“In recent decades, the truth commission has become a mechanism used by states to
address historical injustices. However, truth commissions are rarely used in established
democracies, where the commission of inquiry model is favoured. I argue that established
democracies may be more amenable to addressing historical injustices that continue to
divide their populations if they see the truth commission mechanism not as a unique
mechanism particular to the transitional justice setting, but as a specialised form of a
familiar mechanism, the commission of inquiry. In this framework, truth commissions are
distinguished from other commissions of inquiry by their symbolic acknowledgement of
historical injustices, and their explicit “social function” to educate the public about those
injustices in order to prevent their recurrence.”

Abstract, Kim Pamela Stanton (2010), pii

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To get a sense of what we are envisioning for the APPCITARJ, it is best to understand what a truth commission is.

• Truth commissions are generally understood to be “bodies set up to investigate a past history of violations of human rights in a particular country -which can include violations by the military or other government forces or armed opposition forces.”[1] Priscilla B. Hayner, in ‘Unspeakable Truths’ delineates four main characteristics of truth commissions:

1. First, they focus on the past and its impact. The events may have occurred in the recent past, but a truth commission is not an ongoing body akin to a human rights commission.

2. Second, truth commissions investigate a pattern of abuse over a set period of time rather than a specific event. In its mandate, the truth commission is given the parameters of its investigation both in terms of the time period covered as well as the type of human rights violations to be explored.

3. Third, a truth commission is a temporary body, usually operating over a period of six months to two years and completing its work by submitting a report. These parameters are established at the time of the commission’s formation, but often an extension can be obtained to wrap things up.

4. Fourth, truth commissions are officially sanctioned, authorised, or empowered by the state. This, in principle, allows the commission to have greater access to information, greater security, and increased assurance that its findings will be taken under serious consideration. Official sanction from the government is crucial because it represents an acknowledgment of past wrongs and a commitment to address the issues. Furthermore, governments may be more likely to enact recommended reforms if they have established the commission.

PUBLIC HEARING

Goals of truth commissions include:

• Making recommendations for redress suffered by victims and survivors
• Recording and educating about the past
• Identifying perpetrators
• Formulating policy proposals and recommendations on rehabilitation and the healing of Maangamizi resistors, survivors, their families and the community at large
• Providing the victims/survivors with different forms of support to ensure that the commission of inquiry/truth commission process restores the victims’ dignity
• Preventing repetition of aspects of the Maangamizi
• Forming the basis for a new pluriversal democratic order
• Promoting reconciliation
• Creating a collective memory.

You can see  a list of previous truth commissions here.

Characteristics of commissions of inquiry with truth commission functions:

  • They are non-judicial mechanisms but can complement judicial mechanisms;
  • They are commissions of inquiry whose primary function is investigation of human and people and Mother Earth rights violations and violations of humanitarian law, unlike courts or tribunals which deal with adjudication;
  • They focus on severe acts of violence or repression;
  • They are victim-centred bodies focused on victims ideas, views, needs, experiences and preferences as primary focus as opposed to elite witnesses or perpetrators;
  • They formulate recommendations to guarantee the non-repetition of past crimes and reform state institutions involved in the commission of human, peoples and Mother Earth rights violations.

Truth Commission Activities

  • Investigations/ documentation of violations/ research
  • Statement taking
  • Interview/ public hearings
  • Victim Support
  • Events and programmes to promote intra and inter community cohesion, reconciliation and conciliation
  • Public awareness.

Advantages of the APPCITARJ:

  • It can delegitimize Maangamizi denial;
  • It can rebut misrepresentations of the old order through investigations, public hearings and detailed reports;
  • It can spur significant national debates;
  • It can help governments to take corrective/reparatory actions and develop reparatory policies;
  • It can provide a measure of accountability for the legacies of past and present atrocities and violations/abuses of human, peoples and Mother Earth rights through its findings.

There are many factors that will determine the composition and mandate of the APPCITARJ including how much we are able to bring pressure to bear on relevant decision-makers and institutions. There has already been some thinking, analysis, research and consultation on what the purpose of the APPCITARJ should be, although this is an evolving process.

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The APPCITARJ will seek to:

  1. acknowledge the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of the imposition of the Maangamizi, i.e. Afrikan chattel, colonial and neocolonial enslavement within and beyond the British Empire;
  2. examine subsequent de jure and de facto racial and economic discrimination against Afrikans and people of Afrikan descent;
  3. examine the impact of these forces on living Afrikans and Afrikan descendant communities, as well as other peoples;
  4. make recommendations to Parliament and similar bodies at local, national and international levels, including the European Parliament, and;
  5. Determine appropriate methods of dissemination of findings to the public within and beyond Britain for consultation about proposals for supporting Afrikan Heritage Community Self-Repairs and designing other forms of redress and repairs.

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On the importance of speaking our grassroots power of truth to establishment power

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“The victim who is able to articulate the situation of the victim has ceased to be a victim… he or she has become a threat.”

James Baldwin, ‘The Devil Finds Work’, 1976

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In providing testimony, the so-called victim/survivor becomes an agent, and his/her narrative is especially threatening because it dares to expose violations and violence when others declare that such oppressions do not exist.

The APPCITARJ will not substitute a judicial process and is not designed to let perpetrators off the hook. Hence the need for the APPCITARJ to evolve in conjunction with the U-PITGJ. The organising processes towards establishment of the APPCITARJ, including the mobilisational role of the SMWeCGEC, will also galvanise grassroots work towards establishing glocal sittings of the U-PITGJ, as part of a series of actions which will put a full stop, by way of holistic and transformative reparations, to all acts of Genocide/Ecocide against Afrikan people.

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Begin preparing yourself for the APPCITARJ & U-PITGJ


You can prepare yourself for the APPCITARJ by beginning to do family and community research on how we and our immediate families each have suffered, continue to suffer and have also challenged the various crimes of the Maangamizi. In this regard, see the aims of the SMWeCGEC.

Afrikans in the UK and Europe organising towards establishing commissions of inquiry for truth and reparatory justice and local, national and international people’s tribunals to hold the governments of Britain, and other European countries to account. If you are able to gather such evidence you can assist us  to arrive at a comprehensive assessment and a full picture of what our journeys and experiences of the Maangamizi have been across the Diaspora, as well as on the continent of Afrika.

Each person and representative of families and their communities have to become our own advocates and experts on your own situation and then we can bring all these experiences together as part of us becoming ‘reparations enforcers’ who are building the power and capacity to hold to account all those who are continuing to profit from the ill-gotten gains of the Maangamizi and are also complicit in its perpetuation today.

See the video below from the documentary ‘Freedom Summer’ for some APPCITARJ lessons from our Shero Fannie Lou Hamer.

https://www.facebook.com/AmericanExperience/videos/10154189386704122

Hamer’s testimony had such a huge impact upon the government and public in and outside the USA, and was so powerful, that President Lyndon B. Johnson called an impromptu press conference to get her off the air. This is a recording of the full testimony and also a transcript of that testimony. Her testimony provides an example of what we envisage could be the impact similar ISMAR-coordinated grassroots testimonies by our Afrikan Survivors, Resistors and Challengers of the Maangamizi, from all over the World to the APPCITARJs in the UK Parliament of Westminster and the European Parliament. We surmise that the ‘holding to account’ referred to above can best be done in a collective way by supporting the establishment of the Ubuntukgotla, court of peoples humanity interconnectedness, otherwise known as the Peoples International Tribunal for Global Justice (U-PITGJ), which we encourage you to support the development of. This can be done through hosting sittings of the tribunal, locally, nationally and internationally.

As part of the rationale for this approach, it is important to have a better sense of the historical antecedents of the SMWeCGEC in the UK, see these historic recordings from 2003 of Esther Stanford-Xosei, former legal advisor to the BQJC speaking about the BQJC legal & extra-legal strategy for reparations; the need for a UK commission of inquiry to address the legacies of the Maangamizi; and the commencement of the UK version of the ‘We Charge Genocide Petition and campaign’ under the auspices of then then Black United Front-Parliament (BUF-P). The second set of videos where Stanford-Xosei is interviewed, precedes in order and time the first video where she speaks to camera.

 

Set up a family or community group Maatzoedzaduara

You can set up a MAATZOEDZADUARA (i.e. Maat action-learning circles or ‘Maat Training Practice Rings’) which is a reparatory justice circle of Maat practitioners who learn to be the self-repairs change at the levels of their person, home, family, neighbourhood, workplace, school, places of leisure and worship, etc. These Maat Training Practice Rings encompass a number of families and lineages, across geographical boundaries and generations. For example, a home or family based Maat Training Practice Ring will entail getting a selected number of people in your family interested in unravelling family histories and using this knowledge to recognise and gather evidence of the harm that has been done to you as a family.

The Practice Rings will also explore how such harms have been passed down throughout the generations, resulting in increasing levels of disrepair. We are looking for case studies of some of these family stories documenting family member’s lived experiences of the Maangamizi and resistance to it. This unravelling of these stories is part of the process of repairing the harm and continuing damage being done and passed down intergenerationally within our own families.


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You can also creatively utilise SMWeCGEC Petition Soulsquestathons (SMWeCGEC-PS), which are literally a collection of souls, for spark-rippling MAATZOEZADUARAs. The aim is to link chains of MAATZOEZADUARAs together encompassing a number of families, across geographical boundaries and generations, all over the place, as Grassroots Afrikan Reparatory Justice Action Learning Praxis Exercising Rings (GARJALPERs) of the U-PITGJ. This means that they will share their stories and practice not only testifying with these stories but also putting their cases through trial rehearsals. The key point about the Soulsquestathons is that the various participants connect to, compare and contrast their self-repairs reparatory justice work as families within these MAATZOEZADUARAs. Basically, these are intergenerational connections, not only of family members of the present, but also the past. It therefore becomes necessary for us to keep records about and bring the lives and work of our revered Ancestors into our everyday lives of the present.

If you would like to know more about how to get involved with the APPCITARJ/U-PITGJ or you would like support with setting up a Maatzoedzaduara please contact PARCOE on info@parcoe.com or 07751143043.

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Share your story!

One of the roles of the APPCITARJ will be to gather statements from Maangamizi resistors, survivors and anyone else who feels they have been impacted by the Maangamizi and its legacies.

It is our intention to coordinate the collection of individual statements by written, electronic or other appropriate means such as audio-visual recordings with regard to providing a safe, supportive and sensitive environment for individual/collective/group statement taking/truth sharing.

If you would like to begin with compiling your story as a case study or indeed to make a statement about the impact of the Maangamizi, you are invited to contact us to discuss how best this can be done.

You can also lobby your local MP and other public elected officials to support the establishment of the APPCITARJ by utilising this SMWeCGEC postcard campaign tool.

It is important that you let us know how you get on with your local MP or other publicly elected officials so that we can keep a record of progress or where there is a need for more focused lobbying. Here are the contact details for the SMWeCGEC. Please also see this guidance on Guidance on Proposals for Parliamentary Actions.

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What next?


In partnership with the Afrikan Emancipation Day Afrikan Reparations March Committee and other reparatory justice organising processes, we in the SMWeCGEC will continue to consult and canvass our communities, networks and constituencies of the ISMAR on the following four themes:

1. How best people can be involved and participate in the APPCITARJ?
2. Aims, hopes and fears for the APPCITARJ?
3. Mandate, terms of reference, powers and structure of the APPCITARJ?
4. What are the other ways to deal with the legacies of the Maangamizi and enforce accountability?

The SMWeCGEC will continue to develop alliance-building work; such as has occurred with the Green Party who at their 2020 autumn conference which concluded on the 11th October 2020, passed a motion on ‘Atonement and Reparative Justice for the Transatlantic Traffic in Enslaved Africans‘. The SMWeCGEC worked with members of the Green Party in developing this motion.

Volunteer researchers required to contribute to a people’s history-making process of securing reparatory justice!

Law students

If you are a law or politics student or have other relevant skills and experience and you are interested in using your knowledge and skills to support Afrikan people’s struggle for holistic redress and secure Afrikan Reparatory Justice, you can become a volunteer researcher. We are looking for volunteer researchers who would like to join the SMWeCGEC research team in preparations for establishing the APPCITARJ and the U-PITGJ. If you would like to get involved, please contact: Afrikan Reparations Transnational Community of Practice (ARTCoP) on artcop.edu@gmail.com or PARCOE on info@parcoe.com or 07751143043.

Support from movement lawyers is welcome!

If you are a social justice advocate, legal practitioner or cause lawyer and would like to offer pro-bono advice or support to this community-led initiative; are willing to build equitable relationships with people and organisations challenging historical and contemporary injustice; and are prepared to respect the approach of social justice/community lawyering,*please also get in touch as above.

*Community lawyering has many variants: collaborative lawyering, community, lay lawyering, cause lawyering, social justice lawyering, political lawyering, critical lawyering, rebellious lawyering, movement-lawyering etc. The common thread among them is that the clients, not the lawyers, play a central role in resolving the issues that have an impact on their opportunities to succeed. It is: lawyering that is community-located, community-collaborative, community-directed and based on the collaboration of lawyers, clients and communities in which they live; and transforming law and lawyering to address the inequalities experienced by subordinated and underserved groups. The legal system in the UK and other Westernised countries is very individualistic. It tends to atomise and depoliticise disputes, which work against a community organising model. Furthermore, the facilitation of individual rights has not benefited the long-term needs of communities, especially impoverished communities, especially where such impoverishment is as a result of intergenerational injustice. The Sargent Shriver National Centre on Poverty Law (USA) defines “community lawyering” as a “process through which advocates contribute their legal knowledge and skills to support initiatives that are identified by the community and enhance the community’s power.”

Similar to the different schools of thought in community organising, community lawyering has many different strains. However, what sets lawyers who adopt community lawyering apart from each other boils down to their answers to the following three questions: Who do you work with? What do you do for them? And how do you work together? Similar to community organising, the answers to these questions vary depending on the political orientation of the lawyer and the theory of social change they ascribe to. By combining legal recourse and community organising, it is possible to utilise “community lawyering” as a social change strategy.” This approach engages lawyers who are prepared to de-emphasise litigation as the primary tool for advancing social justice. Instead, community lawyering encourages such lawyers, in collaboration with communities, their groups, activists and organisers, to critically and creatively examine non-traditional forms of advocacy such as facilitative leadership, institution-building, community organising, collective action and other grassroots actions including strategic litigation, media events, community education workshops and public demonstrations. This is done as a way of addressing the legal and non-legal problems of their clients. Community lawyering can also be described as a more participatory process that fosters collaboration between lawyers and their community (group) clients, rather than fostering—if not perpetuating—the dependency that most clients have on their lawyers to solve their legal problems in a conventional lawyer-client relationship. 

The role of a “community lawyer” entails working in partnership with one’s community clients and utilises multiple forms of advocacy, to address their individual as well as systemic problems. Community lawyering practitioners recognise that their clients are partners—not just in name—but in leadership, control and decision-making. Through collaboration, lawyers can support Afrikan Heritage Community groups in building their own resources and community capacities to advance their own interests in effecting and securing reparatory justice in a self-determined and self-directed manner.

Another critical component of community lawyering is creating race-conscious cultural competence—a set of beliefs, values, and skills built into a structure that enables one to negotiate cross-cultural situations in a manner that does not force one to assimilate to the other. The goal of race-conscious community lawyering is to support lasting structural and systemic changes that will bring about holistic reparatory justice for racialised groups.

Movement-lawyering is a specific form of community lawyering but the lawyers work in collaboration with grassroots movements. This lawyering recognises that community members and organisers have expertise that should be valued. In fact, movement lawyers should also be engaged in a process of political study and growth collectively with movement-organisers that are aligned with particular community struggles. Here are some tips for lawyers that are aligned with movements and are particularly relevant to how lawyers can best support communities, their activists and organisers who are engaged in reparatory justice struggles as part of the ISMAR.

COI CHRISTOPHER ICHA

Notes
[1] Priscilla B. Hayner, Unspeakable Truths. New York: Routledge, 2001, p. 14.

Posted in AEDRMC, AFRIKAN HELLACAUST, ALL PARTY PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSION OF INQUIRY (APPCITARJ), INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL MOVEMENT FOR AFRIKAN REPARATIONS, ISMAR, PALM, PREFIGURATIVE POLITICS, REPARATIONS, Reparatory Justice, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI CAMPAIGN, STOP THE MAANGAMIZI PETITION, UBUNTUKGOTLA/PITGJ | Tagged Allies, APPCITARJ, British Colonialism, British Government, Cognitive Justice, Commission of Inquiry, Green Party, Green Party Conference, Greens of Colour, International Social Movment for Afrikan Reparations, ISMAR, Maangamizi, People Power, Peoples Tribunal, REPARATIONS, Reparatory Justice, Self-Repairs, SMWeCGE Petition, Social Movement, Stop the Maangamizi, We Charge Genocide/Ecocide! | Leave a comment

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